Valentino Rossi’s VR46 team gets Saudi Aramco sponsorship for 2022

Valentino Rossi’s VR46 team secures Saudi backing for a full MotoGP entry in the 2022 MotoGP World Championship. After debut into the premier-class by running Luca Marini within the Esponsorama team this season, Valentino Rossi’s VR46 squad has secured backing for a full MotoGP entry of its own from 2022. “In 2022 the VR46 Team will debut in the MotoGP class together with Tanal Entertainment Sport & Media with Saudi Aramco as the main sponsor for the period 2022-2026,” read a press release from Tanal Entertainment Sport & Media. Graphics of an Aramco-branded VR46 machine were included with the release – maybe it’s just for illustration purposes, but the bike used was a Yamaha M1. Yamaha currently supplies satellite MotoGP machines to Petronas and, while no agreement has been officially announced with the successful Malaysian team for 2022, renewal negotiations are said to be at an advanced stage. But it’s not only M1s that are currently available, Suzuki and Aprilia are also seeking a satellite team next season, while if Esponsorama makes way for VR46 then Ducati would also need a new team to maintain its current six-bike supply (as it hopes to do). The Aramco-VR46 deal includes continuing in Moto2, as the Saudi branding effectively replaces Sky Italia on the VR46 bikes (Sky is also thought to be a part owner of the VR46 team). Rossi himself is yet to decide if he will race on in 2022, the nine-time world champion currently having just a single-year contract with Petronas.

Read More

Pirelli outlines tyre rules for Sprint Qualifying races

Formula 1 is set to trial its Sprint Qualifying format at three venues this season, starting at Silverstone in July. But what specific tyre rules will be in force on those three weekends? As a reminder, drivers will qualify on Friday afternoon for the Saturday 30-minute mad dash that will determine the grid for Sunday’s Grand Prix. Pirelli will allocate a total of 12 sets of tyres to each driver t cover the entire weekend: six sets of the Red soft tyre, four sets of the Yellow medium compound and two sets of the Hard white rubber. Four sets of intermediates and three sets of full wets will also be available for each driver – as is currently also the case – in the event of adverse conditions. Formula 1 is still finetuning the rules, so there could be a few tweaks to the following: • Free practice: In Free Practice 1, taking place for 60 minutes on Friday, each driver must use two sets of tyres (of any compound) and hand back one set to Pirelli at the end of the session. In Free Practice 2, taking place for 60 minutes on Saturday, each driver can use as many sets of tyres as they like within their allocation. • Qualifying: Only the Red soft tyre can be used, up to a maximum of five sets. Of these, one can only be used in Q3 (if a driver gets through). None of the drivers will be obliged to start Sunday’s grand prix on the tyre with which they set their best time in Q2. Instead, they have a free choice. • Sprint Qualifying: Each driver has a free choice of tyres. At the end of the Sprint Qualifying, they will return the set that has completed the most laps. Unlike the grand prix on Sunday, there is no obligatory pit stop during the Sprint Qualifying. If it takes place in wet conditions, each driver must hand back a set of Cinturato Blue wet or Cinturato Green intermediate tyres after the race. Pirelli will replace these with an extra set of Cinturato Green intermediates. • Grand Prix: After starting the race on whichever tyres they like – with no need to use the tyre that set the best time in Q2 – each driver can run their preferred strategy, but the rule obliging them to use a minimum of two compounds and make at least one pit stop remains in place. The rule that each driver must keep back two mandatory sets nominated by Pirelli for the race also still applies. The bottom line? Contrary to F1’s normal weekend format, where a driver must race on the tyre used to set his fastest time in Q2, everyone will have a free choice of tyres on race day.

Read More

Steiner refutes claims that Schumacher has a huge advantage over Mazepin

Gunther Steiner has denied that Mick Schumacher has a “huge advantage” over fellow Haas rookie Nikita Mazepin in 2021. While 22-year-old Mazepin’s debut season on and off the track has been tumultuous so far, the similarly-aged Schumacher has had a comparatively smoother time. “I am positively surprised by the team – it’s fantastic,” Michael Schumacher’s son told La Gazzetta dello Sport. “We are already in synch even if we haven’t known each other for a long time. I feel at home. “The team has a good structure and there is a good atmosphere and this is certainly positive,” Schumacher added. However, Schumacher headed off to Maranello after Imola to work in Ferrari’s simulator, and then he tested a 2018 Ferrari on the Fiorano circuit. Russian Mazepin, in contrast, told Match TV: “As I am not a member of that youth team, I do not have such a privilege. I will prepare for Portimao here in Moscow.” However, Haas boss Steiner denied that Schumacher is enjoying a clear advantage over Mazepin. “I wouldn’t say it’s an advantage,” he told the German broadcaster n-tv. “Nikita also drives in the simulator. Driving is always good, you always learn something. “But actually there is very little advantage in driving a two-year-old car in Fiorano,” Steiner insisted. What Steiner does admit is that Schumacher’s situation could be playing on Mazepin psychologically. “If you put yourself in his situation, it all goes into the driver’s psyche,” he said. “He (Schumacher) drives more, so that certainly doesn’t help. But you have to deal with these things, and he will. “It is definitely not a disadvantage for Mick, but it’s not a huge advantage either,” Steiner added. Some have already given Mazepin the cruel nickname ‘Mazespin’ after repeated incidents in Bahrain and Imola, but Steiner insists: “To reproach him now doesn’t help. “You just have to explain to him that sometimes you have to take one step back and then two steps forward. You have to find the limit by approaching it.” Meanwhile, what is clear is that Steiner is happy with Schumacher so far. “He continues to motivate the team, which is not always easy,” Steiner said. “He’s a real professional – it seems like he’s been doing this for years. He leaves nothing to chance.”

Read More

Steiner: Haas future in Formula 1 is secure

Gunther Steiner has played down suggestions that the Haas project may be coming to an end in Formula 1. It is said that the small American team only started the 2021 season – its sixth in Formula 1 – because of Dmitry Mazepin’s sponsorship injection and extra support by Ferrari. Haas is treading water in 2021 by focusing exclusively on developing an all-new car for next year, but boss Steiner denied that the team might not make it to 2022 at all. “I think I can say the team is secure,” he told the Australian GP podcast. “We are fine. We have got a long-term commitment from Mr (Gene) Haas to Formula 1, our finances are good, we found ways to cross that bridge, so I’m really happy with that one.” Steiner says Haas has been working on the 2022 car since early February, and he’s “convinced” that the team will pull itself off the last rows of the grid following the 2020 “crisis”. “We’ve got people joining us from Ferrari on secondment – long-term secondment obviously – and that gives me the confidence, because otherwise how can you be confident if you are like last year?” he said. “We did a lot of changes and we already rebuilt the whole team – they are working already. We started to rebuild the team in December and got going again in January, so that’s where my confidence comes from.” As for 2021, Steiner said Haas will gauge the success of the season not in terms of points, but “how much progress these guys are making”. He is referring to rookies Mick Schumacher and Nikita Mazepin, who are already under contract for 2022. “There will be some down moments – I mean, me personally on a Sunday night if you’ve finished 15th and 16th you’re not having the greatest Sunday evening,” said Steiner. “But you just need to keep focused, believe in the team and yourself, and it’s only ten more months to go anyway.”

Read More

Toyota’s new hypercar, the GR010 outpaced by LMP2 cars

Toyota hopes to make its new GR010 Hybrid Le Mans Hypercar the worthy successor of its former winning LMP1 machine in the WEC, but the car has yet to build an edge over its LMP2 rivals. In the capable hands of Sébastien Buemi, Toyota’s new machine the final session of the WEC’s two-day prologue that took place at Spa ahead of the series’ kick-off in Belgium on Saturday. But Buemi’s best was still half a second slower than the fastest overall time that was set in Tuesday morning’s session by Nyck de Vries at the wheel of G-Drive Racing’s LMP2 Oreca P2s. LMP2 cars were imposed by the WEC a total power reduction of 65bhp, harder tyres and an increase in minimum weigh from 930 to 950kg in order to balance the performance between the Hypercar and LMP2 categories. But Toyota technical director Pascal Vasselon wants the balance reviewed in light of this week’s relative performances between the two categories. “It clearly was not the target to have LMP2 running faster than the Hypercar category,” explained Vasselon. “I am trying to put forward that there was a clear will to correct that; it is just that the correction has to be reviewed.”

Read More

Ilott selected as a second reserve driver for Alfa Romeo, to have FP1 outing in Portugal

2020 vice-champion Callum Ilott’s Formula 1 involvement has been increased for the current campaign, following the announcement that Alfa Romeo have snapped up the Ferrari junior as an official second reserve, a deal that includes multiple FP1 stints. Ilott – who is set to share reserve duties with Robert Kubica – will work with current drivers Antonio Giovinazzi, a former GP2 vice-champion, and the experienced Kimi Räikkönen, the 2007 F1 World Champion. Crucially, the deal will include multiple Free Practice 1 sessions this season, with the Italian team confirming that Ilott will run for them as early as this weekend in Portugal. “I am really happy to be joining the team for this season and I’d like to thank Alfa Romeo Racing ORLEN and the Ferrari Driver Academy for the trust they have put in me,” said Ilott. “The two sessions I had with the team in the last two years have been extremely useful in getting me accustomed to the way a Formula 1 team works and I am confident I can hit the ground running in my new role as one of the reserve drivers at Alfa Romeo Racing ORLEN. I can’t wait to be in the car and help the team continue its progress.” The British driver pushed 2020 champion Mick Schumacher all the way in the title fight last season with UNI-Virtuosi, missing out by just 14 points after an enthralling season closer in Bahrain. Ilott is already an official test and reserve driver for Ferrari, and is currently competing in the 2021 GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup with Iron Lynx. Alfa Romeo team boss Frederic Vasseur added: “I am delighted to welcome Callum to our team: his journey through the junior series has been an impressive one and he is without doubt one of the most talented young drivers coming through the ranks. “He has worked with us before, each time leaving a lasting impression thanks to his work ethic and good feedback, and I have no doubt he will be a very positive addition to Robert Kubica, who will be unavailable on various occasions due to his other racing programmes. “Callum will have a busy programme and we can’t wait to see him on track again this weekend.”

Read More

Yamaha not treating Morbidelli right with outdated bike – Lorenzo

Triple MotoGP world champion Jorge Lorenzo believes Yamaha is not treating Petronas SRT’s Franco Morbidelli “in the best way” by not giving him machine parity with its factory riders. Morbidelli remains on the ‘A-spec’ M1 for the 2021 season, which is effectively a slightly upgraded 2019 Yamaha, on which he rode to second in the championship last season and scored three of the Japanese marque’s seven victories. Yamaha has won all three races in 2021 so far courtesy of its factory duo Maverick Vinales and Fabio Quartararo on the improved factory M1, with the latter leading the standings by 15 points. Morbidelli struggled to 18th with a technical issue in the Qatar Grand Prix, and is currently 11th in the riders’ standings after 12th and fourth-place finishes in the Doha and Portuguese rounds. The Italian expressed frustration at his situation within Yamaha after his Qatar GP problems, though later backtracked on these. But former factory Yamaha rider Lorenzo feels Morbidelli isn’t being treated as he should, but must concentrate on “showing Yamaha that it is wrong”. “Well, my opinion is perhaps quite strong but I think that Yamaha in this case is not treating Franco in the best way because [he] was second overall last year,” Lorenzo said on his 99 Seconds YouTube show. “Ducati gives the four riders [at its factory squad and Pramac] practically the same bike and Yamaha is not doing it, precisely with Franco. “Now, I believe that Franco should demand the same treatment from Yamaha and he does well by threatening in quotes, starting to talk to other factories or those other factories that want him. “But once he puts on his helmet and gets on the bike, he has to concentrate on getting the most out of him and showing Yamaha that he is wrong by not giving him the same treatment.” Lorenzo also commented on Vinales’ main weaknesses as a rider currently, following his tough run to 11th place at Portimao and his downbeat comments afterwards. “He is young and he will come out of this and win races again,” Lorenzo said. “What is clear is that he has two handicaps that are limiting him a lot. “The first is the starts; he has to improve on that, he has to get very serious about trying to improve them because they are limiting him in a great way. “And then those emotional ups and downs that I think he has, I think he needs to be much more consistent because in the end there are always going to be problems. “The Yamaha in some circuits is not going to go well, in others it will be you who does not find yourself fast in the circuit or with the motorcycle and you cannot go fast. “You will have crashes, injuries, moments where you will be physically worse or emotionally and there you have to be consistent, always think positive, try to get the maximum possible points without excuses and saying that everything is a disaster.”

Read More

F1 CEO Domenicali shares thoughts on Super League situation

Stefano Domenicali says the world of football might do well to look at how Formula 1 settled major political disputes in the past. Amid the ‘European Super League’ affair, the F1 CEO said Formula 1 has been in a similar situation before. “We had situations like this twice, where there was the risk of a fracture and attempts to have a championship that would bring home more from the point of view of sports income,” he told Italy’s Sky TG24. “At the moment Formula 1 is starting from the opposite approach – we are trying to control costs,” said the Italian. “It is no coincidence that this year is the first with the budget cap, which gives a different dimension of financial sustainability to the teams. “If I may, it is something football must face, even if it has to do so fairly rapidly,” Domenicali added. “It is certainly difficult but also important to balance all of the different interests.”

Read More

F1 will drop Sprint Qualifying if it doesn’t work

Formula 1 chief Ross Brawn insists the championship will drop its Sprint Qualifying race proposal if it does not prove to be a success when trialed this season. On Monday it was announced that the F1 Commission had unanimously approved the new format – that will see a shortened 100km race take place on Saturday to set the grid for Sunday’s main event – at three selected rounds in 2021. The proposal has been met with a mixed response from fans and drivers alike but Brawn has stressed that F1 will only roll over Sprint Qualifying races into next season if they work. “[One of the challenges was] finding a format that had the right balance between giving us an opportunity to have exciting Friday and Saturday running – perhaps a shorter format race but one which did not take anything away from main event,” Brawn told the official F1 website. “We had to find that balance. Everyone had a different opinion on what that should look like. It was also about finding an economic and logistical solution that didn’t impact teams too severely. “They want this event, but they are all working under massive challenges and we had to find a solution that worked with them without compromising the event. “The drivers are open minded about the format – and that’s all we ask, that the drivers keep an open mind so we can evaluate this event and then we decide if in the future it forms a feature of the F1 season. If it doesn’t work, we put hands up and we will think again.” Brawn made it clear F1 is determined to ensure the new format does not undermine the grand prix but instead enhances the weekend spectacle as a whole. “The thing to remember about Sprint Qualifying is that it’s intention is to expand the whole weekend,” he explained. “It is not intended to impact the race event. The Grand Prix is still the vital event of the weekend. “We want to give fans engagement throughout the whole weekend. Sunday’s Grand Prix is fantastic, and we don’t want to cannibalise that, but we want to lift up the engagement on a Friday and a Saturday. “Friday is really for the aficionados at the moment. Watching practice session on Friday is fun but there is no conclusion to it. But on a Friday now [at these selected events], we’ll have the excitement of the qualifying format. “I think it will be a great addition. There is unlikely to be pit stops, so it’ll be a clean race. It’ll be 30 mins roughly, 100km of action. “We want to see how fans engage with it and if the short format is appealing, it’s complimentary and if it works with the main race. We feel it will. We feel it’s going to be very exciting.”

Read More

United Autosports tops first day in WEC Prologue

The United Autosports LMP2 team again topped the times with Filipe Albuquerque in the final session of the opening day of the World Endurance Championship prologue test at Spa. Albuquerque improved on his morning best by just over one tenth with a 2m04.822s set aboard United’s Oreca-Gibson 07 in the second session of the two-day test ahead of this weekend’s series opener at the Belgian track. Racing Team Nederland driver Job van Uitert ended up one thousandth of a second behind Albuquerque, while Robin Frijns took third as LMP2 machinery blocked out the top three positions on the timesheets. The Alpine-Gibson A480 LMP1 car was quickest in the Hypercar class in fourth position, while the best of the new Toyota GR010 HYBRIDs took sixth overall. Albuquerque knocked the WRT Oreca in which Frijns had posted a 2m05.043s off the top of times with 90 minutes of the session left on the clock. Van Uitert subsequently pushed Frijns down to third with a 2m04.823s in the TDS Racing-run RTN entry. Matthieu Vaxiviere was four tenths off the pace in the down-specced Alpine P1, which is carrying more than 100kg of ballast to help bring its pace into line with that of the new breed of Le Mans Hypercars. He briefly topped the times with a 2m05.230s set 50 minutes into a session lasting nearly four and a half hours. That put him a tenth clear of Loic Duval in fifth position in the TDS squad’s RealTeam Racing entry, which ended up on 2m05.378s. The best of the Toyota LMHs was next best on a 2m05.413s from Kazuki Nakajima, an improvement of nearly one and a half seconds on the Japanese manufacturer’s fastest time on Monday morning. The sister GR010 managed a single flying lap right at the end of the session in Mike Conway’s hands after failing to post a time in the morning. He had just set 2m10.101s, which left him behind all the P2s, when the session was red-flagged with six minutes left on the clock. Toyota’s best lap was just over five seconds slower than its LMP1 TS050 HYBRID managed in free practice for last August’s Spa WEC round. That is the margin that the new technical rules for WEC’s top class are meant to have slowed the cars on a regular circuit for 2021. Albuquerque’s fastest lap was only just over one second than the P2 best in free practice last year, despite a 60bhp power reduction for the secondary prototype class this season. It has also been mandated that the P2 cars must run in the same low-downforce configuration in which they race at the Le Mans 24 Hours at all WEC races this year. This has resulted in an increase in top speed for the P2 cars at Spa: the United Oreca’s best time through the speed trap on the Kemmel Straight was 301.0km/h, which compares with 297.7km/h best in free practice last year. Porsche again led the way in GTE Pro with Kevin Estre in the #91 Manthey-run 911 RSR. The Frenchman produced a 2m14.304s lap, slightly slower than his morning best. Second place in the GTE Pro order was taken by Miguel Molina in the best of the AF Corse-run factory Ferrari 488 GTE Evos with a 2m14.633s. Gianmaria Bruni and James Calado were only a tenth further back in the second cars from Porsche and Ferrari respectively. The Chevrolet Corvette C8.R was just under eight tenths off the pace in Antonio Garcia’s hands. Matteo Cairoli was quickest in GTE Am with a time that put him only behind Estre and Molina in the fastest of the Project 1 team’s Porsches. The session started half an hour early in an attempt to make up the track time lost to three red-flag stoppages in the opening session in the morning. More time was lost early in the extended session with another red flag following two accidents: Sean Gelael backed the Jota P2 Oreca into the barriers at the top of Eau Rouge and Anders Buchardt went off at the Bruxelles hairpin in Project 1’s second Porsche. The final red flag that resulted in the session being curtailed early followed Charles Milesi stopping in the WRT Oreca at No-Name or Speaker’s Corner after Bruxelles.

Read More

Formula 1 approves Sprint Qualifying at three events in 2021

Formula 1 has approved the introduction of Saturday ‘Sprint Qualifying’ races at a trio of grands prix this year in the biggest shake-up to the format in years. Championship organisers have been keen to amend the structure of the weekend for several years and previously floated the idea of a reversed-grid Saturday race at select grands prix. This proposal was twice rejected and organisers focused on a different approach for 2021. The overall concept has been in the public domain for several months but the finer details – including the financial implications – have been under discussion between teams and championship officials. The amended format has now been ratified and while precise locations have yet to be outlined, it is set to take place at grands prix in Britain, Italy and Brazil this year. The usual qualifying format will be shifted to Friday afternoon, with Sprint Qualifying taking place on Saturday, after a second one-hour practice session. A race, of length approximately 100km, will take place, with the outcome determining the grid for Sunday’s grand prix. Three points will be awarded to the driver in first place at the end of Sprint Qualifying, with two for second and one for third spot. “We are excited by this new opportunity that will bring our fans an even more engaging race weekend in 2021,” said Formula 1 chief Stefano Domenicali. “Seeing the drivers battling it out over three days will be an amazing experience and I am sure the drivers will relish the fight. “I am delighted that all the teams supported this plan, and it is a testament to our united efforts to continue to engage our fans in new ways while ensuring we remain committed to the heritage and meritocracy of our sport.” FIA president Jean Todt welcomed F1’s move to seek new and exciting ways of engaging new and existing fans. “I am pleased to see that Formula 1 is seeking new ways to engage with its fans and enlarge the spectacle of a race weekend through the concept of Sprint Qualifying. “It was made possible thanks to the continued collaboration between the FIA, Formula 1, and all of the teams. F1 is showing itself to be stronger than ever with all stakeholders working together in this way, and much has been done to ensure that the Sporting, Technical and Financial aspects of the format are fair.”

Read More

Sprint Qualifying to get a go ahead from F1 commission today

The long-debated Sprint Qualifying format is expected to be approved by the F1 Commission today, paving the way for its introduction at three rounds later this year. In order for it to go ahead the plan must receive at least 28 votes out of 30. Each team has one vote, while Formula 1 Management and the FIA have a further 10 apiece.The scheme, first revealed by RaceFans in February, is likely to gain unanimous backing. Formula 1 believes adding extra races on Saturdays will increase viewership of race weekends, and has been trying to introduce the format in one form or another for years. But while Formula 1 CEO Stefano Domenicali has claimed the plan enjoyed “great feedback from everyone”, several drivers publicly expressed scepticism over it. Sebastian Vettel said it “makes no sense”, Sergio Perez urged F1 to think carefully about “risky” experiments with the race weekend format and Daniel Ricciardo said the extra races must not diminish the value of winning grands prix. The drivers largely fell into line following a meeting with Domenicali during pre-season testing in Bahrain, where they are believed to have been urged to rein in their criticism having panned a similar proposal last year. Pierre Gasly confirmed the sprint race proposal was discussed but said “I don’t want to go public.” “We did this meeting to see all together whether we can move the sport forward and improve the show for all the people and all the fans, because that’s what we all want,” he added. “The main target is to improve the racing. I think all drivers are united in trying to make the car performance closer to each other, improve the show.” The Sprint Qualifying races will be held at three rounds this year. The British, Italian and Sao Paulo grands prix are expected to be chosen. The remuneration package teams will receive in exchange for putting their cars at risk of extra damage has been a sticking point, and could be subject to further last-minute revisions. This is not expected to prevent the format being approved. Final ratification will come from the World Motor Sports Council, which will likely be done via an electronic vote.

Read More

Toyota praises Ogier for victory after Croatia crash

Toyota boss Jari-Matti Latvala has praised Sebastien Ogier for the “professional and fantastic job” he performed after he was involved in an accident ahead of this morning’s opening Croatia Rally stage. The collision between another vehicle is understood to have happened on a section of dual carriageway, with the impact causing significant damage to the co-driver’s side of Ogier’s Toyota Yaris World Rally Car. Both Ogier and his co-driver Julien Ingrassia escaped the shunt uninjured but were forced to carry out remedial work on the supermini, which was subsequently deemed safe to continue by FIA technical delegates. Ogier led going into the final day by 6.9 seconds but had his advantage trimmed by teammate Elfyn Evans to 4.2 seconds on stage 17 before losing top spot to the Welshman on the antepenultimate test. With one stage remaining – the 8.8-mile ‘Zagorska Sela to Kumrovec’ power stage – Evans enjoys a slender 3.9 second buffer, with Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville a further 4.1 seconds adrift in third place. For the entirety of the final leg of the Tarmac counter, Ingrassia has resorted to wearing goggles inside the car to protect his eyes from fine particles of dust and dirt that are managing to find their way into the cabin. Despite the magnitude of the damage, Latvala confirmed the car was “fine” from both a technical and performance perspective and was confident seven-time champion Ogier would push for the victory. “The engineers and the designers, they do a big effort to get the aerodynamics working in the car, so obviously that is upset,” said the Finn. “The aerodynamics now – how the airflow should be going – it’s not getting better. For sure, it is difficult to say how much it is affecting the speed but clearly it is not making the car better or faster. “But I know Sebastien very well and this incident was definitely not giving you the best feeling to start the stages – but he is a professional and he has done a fantastic job in that sense [after the accident]. “Now is the time to reset and after the reset I still expect he can get the feeling and I am still confident he will be able to fight – even for the victory.”

Read More

F1 considering replacing Canadian GP with Turkish GP

Istanbul Park in Turkey could be added to the 2021 F1 calendar in place of the Canadian Grand Prix, which may have to be cancelled again due to the pandemic. While recent media reports in Canada claiming the race has already been called off are understood to be premature, F1 is making preparations to abandon its trip to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve for the second year in a row.Canada has experienced a ‘third wave’ of Covid-19 cases in recent weeks. The number of infections rose to 8,616 per day over the past week, and the increasing spread of new variants of the virus is a particular concern. The home race for Lance Stroll and Nicholas Latifi was due to take place on June 13th, one week after the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. If it cannot go ahead, F1 is planning to replace it with another race closer to the teams’ bases in Europe. A meeting of the F1 Commission today will discuss plans to relocate the seventh round of the championship to Istanbul Park. The Turkish venue featured on the F1 calendar between 2005 and 2011, and returned last year when the schedule was reorganised due to the pandemic. Germany’s Nurburgring, another 11th-hour addition to last year’s calendar, is also under consideration as an alternative to the Montreal round. However Turkey’s circuit is believed to have offered the championship better financial terms. The commission will discuss other subjects including plans for Sprint Qualifying sessions at three races this year, increasing the number of formal testing opportunities for junior drivers, addressing potential loopholes in the Financial Regulations which were introduced this year and the potential introduction of a salary cap.

Read More

Sebastien Ogier gets a suspended ban and fines amounting to £7,000 after Croatia crash

Rally Croatia victor Sebastien Ogier will maintain the WRC event win but has been slapped with two fines and a suspended ban for his part in a traffic crash on the morning of the final day. Ogier crashed with a BMW as he made his way from service to the start of the day’s opening stage. It left the Toyota with damage to the passenger side door but was otherwise able to continue in the rally. In doing so, it was judged that Ogier had left the scene of an accident, for which he was fined €5000 (AUD $7802) and handed a suspended ban. Soon after, he ran a red light, which attracted another €2000 (AUD $3121) fine. In reviewing the incident, officials noted that Ogier left the scene of the accident despite a police officer standing in front of the car. He and co-driver Julien Ingrassia had been trying to pull to the side of the road to check their Toyota Yaris after leaving service. “Mr Ogier explained that after they had left the service park, they realised they needed to stop to check something on the car,” the stewards’ decision stated. “Once they started from the traffic lights, they saw a suitable bus stop on the right and changed the lane to reach the bus stop. “Another car was approaching at the same time fast from behind on the same lane and crashed into the right side of car No. 1.” Once police arrived, a Toyota team member attended the scene of the crash to help translate. As the matter was in hand, Ogier felt he was able to leave – information that was not relayed to the police officer standing in front of the car (see video below). “Mr Ogier added that he fully understands that this should not have happened and that this makes his behaviour to look very bad as videoclips are spreading in the social media,” the stewards’ decision said. “Mr Ogier apologised for this offence and promised to contact the driver of the other car involved in the accident and also the police officer who was standing in front of the car to present his apologises (sic) also to them. “The Stewards concluded that as such a traffic accident is not necessarily a breach of the regulations. Nevertheless, the behaviour of Mr Ogier cannot be accepted. “By driving the car and pushing the police officer aside, Mr Ogier caused an unsafe situation. “The incident is prejudicial to the interests of motorsport.” Leading the rally at the time of the crash, Ogier ceded top spot to team-mate Elfyn Evans during the final day, stealing it back on the last Special Stage of the event. The Frenchman now leads the championship as a result with 61 points over Thierry Neuville (53) and Evans (51).

Read More

Mercedes tries to postpone Ben Hodgkinson’s move to Red Bull until 2022

Red Bull have struck an important blow with the arrival of Ben Hodgkinson. The man who played an important role in the development of the engine at Mercedes, will make the switch to Red Bull in 2022, and that does cause some tension. The 2021 Formula One season has only just begun, but with Hodgkinson’s move, Red Bull Racing have dealt the first blow. In a year like this, it’s all about sticking together as a team, and there will be internal problems at Mercedes since news of Hodgkinson’s departure came out. Not only is Hodgkinson leaving the team, but it also emerged earlier that he had spoken to some colleagues to join him at Red Bull. Of course, this causes a lot of commotion at Mercedes, because they don’t know which of their employees would like to join them. For Red Bull this is an important move on two fronts. On the one hand it brings in knowledge about Mercedes’ engine and someone who is capable of leading a project towards an own engine for 2025. On the other hand, this move also ensures that the major competitor is disrupted. Where Mercedes has been very quiet in recent years and every departure was dealt with internally, this is a huge blow. After seven world titles, a key member of staff suddenly opts for the big rival, and apparently staff members within the organisation have also been told to leave. It’s time for Toto Wolff to start putting out those fires. In the meantime, according to Motorsport.it, Mercedes is doing everything possible to postpone Hodgkinson’s departure as long as possible. Because this would involve a key pawn in the organization, Mercedes is demanding the longest departure before the new position at Red Bull can be started. Mercedes would thus try to have Hodgkinson make the switch to Red Bull only at the end of 2022.

Read More